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The LOYOIA MAROON Vol. XXXIV Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, April 26, 1957 No. 23 'Nite At Loyola' Underway At 8:30 p. m. Music Frat Presents Annual Show Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, music fraternity's annual musical presentation "Nite at Loyola" is slated for tonight at 8:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse. The musical program which will range from popular tunes to the classics will feature the Loyola University Concert Band, underthe direction of Mr. George A. Jansen and Campus Capers Orchestra under Curtis Rome, music senior. The show, which was formally presented in the quadrangle, was moved to the Fieldhouse this year because of the possibility of rain and the lighting problem that faces the fraternity each year, Pat Harrigan, president, said. "The new acoustical (hell will now enable uD to have the program in the Fieldhouse," he added. Campus Capers will provide the music on the first half of the show and featured vocalists will include Barbara Faulkner and Lynn Murphy.The second half will feature the concert band and soloists: Olando Tognozzi, clarinetist; Joy Conrad, flutist; Olga Seiferth, soprano; and Don Bernard, baritone. The concert band will perorm works by Wagner, Bizet, Anderson and Pryor. Another feature of the evening will be the presentation of fraternity sweethearts. They are: Duane Leach, Alpha Delta Gamma; Mary Jane Watkini, Sigma Alpha Kappa; Evelyn Komma, Uptilon Beta Lambda and Olga Seiferth, Phi Mu Alpha. The sweethearts will be introduced during intermission and will be presented some memento of the occasion, Harrigan said. Bob Guidry will be master of ceremonies. at Loyola" is an annual show sponsored by the music fraternity and dedicated to and performed by students, alumni, and faculty members of the University.The program is open to the public. Tickets are on sale today on campus for $1. They may also be purchased at the Fieldhouse door. PROGRAM CAMPUS CAPERS The Saints _ Traditional The Dixielanders The Man That Got Away - arr. A. Hogan Lynn Murphy Bill _ Kern—arr. C. Rome Featuring Carl Hellmers Frantt' Chance Franti-Rome Featuring Don Frantl All The Things You Are _. Kern—-arr. C. Rome Barbara Faulkner The Volga Boatman Russian Hymn arr. C. Rome The Hungary Five From Germany „ _ Alford Go Mosee Go. Traditional Trans. Herritt True Love , .Vocal Duet Barbara Faulkner, Lynn Murphy I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm arr. Braud Presentation of Sweethearts— ADG ... Duane Leach SAK Mary Jane Watkins ÜBL Evelyn Komma Phi Mu Alpha Olga Seiferth —INTERMISSION— CONCERT BAND Ouvre Ton Coeur Biiet—Rome Olxa Seiferth Jota Aragonesa Glinka Trees Rasbach Don Bernard Serenata Anderson Hoopla - Morrlsßej Fantasie Impromptu ..... Chopin Olando Tognotzi The Whistler And His Dog Pryor Overture To Rienii Wagner CURTIS ROME and GEORGE A. JANSEN To Nominate For Student Council Posts Polls Open Monday, Tuesday On Campus Loyolans will nominate candidates for posts on the 1957-58 Student Council at polls located in the various schools and colleges Monday and Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Elections will be conducted on the same days a week later, according to Matt Schott, president of A&S and council election chairman. Interest in the nominations has been heightened by a controversy in the council over scholastic requirements for council eligibility. A motion which would have tended to set a definite scholastic standard for eligibility was defeated at a meeting Tuesday. Offered by Dan Stapp, law school representative, the motion would have recommended that the dean of students use a one quality point average as a basis for ruling on eligibility. Final determination of eligibility, under the council constitution, rests with the dean of students. Some students who have announced intentions to seek nomination would be ineligible if such a standard had been adopted. Twice the number of representatives and two nominees for the presidency of each school or college normally merit nomination. However, in cases where the nominating votes are close, Schott as election chariman can recommend that exceptions be made to allow more nominees. In the past, such recommendations have been accepted without opposition. All schools and colleges are represented by their presidents and by a number of represnetatives determined by enrollment figures. The number of representatives are: 10 in arts and sciences, four in business administration, three in the evening division and two each in law, dentistry, pharmacy and music. Miller Receives Grant For Heart Research Robert G. Miller, biology senior, was recently awarded a $1000 traineeship from the Cardiovascular Research Program of the Louisiana Heart Association, the Rev. John H. Mullahy, S.J., biology department chairman, announced.Miller will work on cardiovascular research, the heart and associated vessels, June, July and August in the zoology department at Tulane University under Dr. Milton Fingerman, of the Tulano medical staff. The 21-year-old native Orleanian it currently engaged in lymphatic circulation study in hit pre-medical courte at Loyola. He hat been accepted and will enter Louitiana State Medical School in the fall. Miller is president of Tri Beta, national honorary biological society, treasurer of the Chemistry Club, secretary of Agramonte Pre- Med Society, a member of Alpha Sigma Nu, national honorary Jesuit scholastic society, the German Club and the Interorganizational Council. 808 MILLER Phi Beta Gives Hospital Show Members of Phi Beta, national professional music and speech fraternity, presented an Easter show for patients at tno Veterans' Administration Hospital in Gulfport, Miss, last Saturday . The women's fraternity was assisted in the production by members of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, national music fraternity for men. Participating in the program were: Olga Seiferth, Yvonne Mateau, Patty Macke, Kathleen Tonry, Joan Gaulene, Bobby Morgan, Curtis Rome, Carl Helmers, Donavan Franz, Erwin Fricke, and Hank Barraco. The show was one in a series of hospital programs the fraternity is presenting as part of their national project, Mateau, project chairman, said. Jr.-Sr. Prom Slated May 10 The Junior-Senior Prom, sponsored by the Student Council, will be held Friday, May 10 at the New Orleans Country Club from 9 p.m. til 1 a.m. Tickets are available from any Student Council representative for $3.00 per couple. A council ruling requests that no corsages be worn. Civil Defense Helps Now By RONALD A. FONSECA Every day at noon, the loud shrill voice of a distant siren can be heard beckoming thousands of Orleanians to their lunch hour. It's a familiar sound, drawing little notice from one so used to hearing it. But what, should this same siren sound its call blasting the stillness of the night? Such a thing is indeed possible. But what would you do if it would happen? What would you know how to do? If the city had to be evacuated, what direction would you take? What streets would be blocked off to you? Suppose you had no time to evacuate, how could you afford the maximum protection from a bomb blast to you and your family? If you should survive the blast itself, what do you personally think are your chances for surviving the afthermath? That depends on your knowing what to do and how to do it. Those who are caught within the radius of two miles from the center of a small atomic blast have practically no hope for survival. Further out the percentage of those who will die from the blast will of course decrease. However many will be in critical condition. Some will have broken bones, some with serious burns, some buried under burning debris. Not excluding a small number who will be suffering from radioactive poisoning. Civil defense does not begin with the sounding of the warning siren, it begins now when there is time to learn what to do. When the siren sounds it will be too late to learn. Civil Defense is not the problem of the Civil Defense authorities, it's your headache now so it won't be yours later. Dr. Brown Awards DWW Degree Dinty Warmington Whiting, New Orleans attorney, received a degree of Doctor of Worldly Wisdom here recently from Dr. Brendan F. Brown of the Loyola school of law. The degree, conferred for the first time here, enables Whiting to participate in all activities and privileges of the Boswell Institute, of which Dr. Brown is local chancellor.Formed by Johnson and Boswell, in the 18th century, the Boswell Institute originally attempted to spread the best in literature and thinking throughout the British Empire. The Institute wu started at Oxford University and Dr. Brown, a graduate of law from the English school, is carrying on the Johnson and Boswell tradition here in the United States. Whiting, a graduate of Georgetown University, is associate editor of the Latin American Report and has been in foreign service as a counsel of the United States. The local chapter of the Boswell Institute is composed of 17 members including James W. Dyson, University librarian. Dr. Raymond P. Witte, director of the Evening Division and professor of history is scheduled to receive the degree in the near future. PRESENTING THE FIRST NEW ORLEANS Doctor of Worldly Witdom degree are (left to right) DR. BRENDAN F. BROWN, local chancellor and ROUSSEAU VAN VOORHIES, former Student Council pretident, to DINTY WARMINGTON WHITING, attorney. Loyola 1950 Business Grad Gets Fulbright Charles B. Wilson, 1950 graduate cum laude from the college of business administration, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship by the Department of State, Father James Yamauchi, S.J., announced.The scholarship was granted to enable him to study drama at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in England. Approximately 950 grants for graduate study are being awarded under the International Educational Exchange Program. Students are recommended by the campus Fulbright committees and by the Institute of International Education. The International Educational Exchange Program it designed to promote a better understanding of the United States and the people of other countries. The program also provides opportunities for students from foreign nations to study in American colleges and universities, and for an exchange of teachers, lecturers, research scholars and specialists between the United States and more than seventy foreign countries. Students interested in Fulbright Scholarships should contact Father Yamauchi, Stallings Hall, Room 111. Dr. Ireland Plans Seminar In May Dr. Edward Ireland, of the college of pharmacy faculty, has been invited to conduct a six hour seminar at the meeting of the Catholic Hospitals Association in Cleveland, Ohio, May 26. The topic of Dr. Ireland's lectures will be "The Autonomic System and its Problems." Postpone Riesel Forum The appearance of labor columnist Victor Riesel on the Loyola Forum's last program of the season has been postponed indefinitely, according to the Rev. John A. Toomey, S.J., Forum director. Riesel was to have appeared Tuesday in the Roosevelt Hotel, but because of unforeseen business complications in New York City, he informed Father Toomey that it was necessary to postpone the appearance here and several other lectures. A date for his appearance will be announced later, Father Toomey said. Service Frat Elects Miller Bill Miller, BA soph, was installed as president of Alpha Pi Omicron, service fraternity, Monday succeeding Pete Cavallo, BA senior. The installation was held at the group's annual banquet at Delmonico's.Other elected officers installed are Louis Maumus, A&S soph, vice-resident; Bill Louree, A&S junior, secretary; Andree Brousseau, A&S soph, activity secretary; George Friedman, A&S soph, treasurer; Harold Anderson, A&S soph, sergeant-at-arms; Bill Geary, A&S soph, chaplain. The editor and business manager for the fraternity's 1957-58 issue of the Student Directory were appointed by the president. Bob Winn, BA frosh, was named editor and Merrill Landweher, BA soph, will serve as business manager.BILL MILLER Law Clubbers Defeat hat In Argument St. Thomas More Law Club won the annual inter-organizational moot court competition recently for the second successive time, defeating Delta Theta Phi law fraternity.Representing St. Thomas More were Gerald Chopin and Paul Hurley, while Herbert W. Christen berry, Jr. and John Peytavin argued the case for the fraternity. Peytavin was awarded the Oswaido Ramirez loving cup for the best speaker of the event, and gold and silver keys were awarded the winning and losing teams respectively.Judging the event were Judge Walter B. Hamlin of the Civil District Court, who is temporarily on the Louisiana Supreme Court, Mr. Joseph Blasi and Mr. Leon Sarpy. The case was an argument on appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court, entitled "United States vs. Carl Young." It was the same case argued here in November at the Southwestern Moot Court Regional Competitions. In the trial, Young is appealing to the Supreme Court of the United States for a new trial in the lower Federal Court. He was previously found guilty by a jury for the first degree murder of an FBI agent, who he killed when the agent attempted to arrest him. His appeal is based on a point of law, that the trial judge gave the wrong instructions to the jury on his plea of insanity, and due to modern psychiatric findings, it may be proven that the old test for legal insanity is outmoded, and therefore unjust.The Moot competition was held in the Supreme Court Room of the Civil Courts Building. Clothes Drive The clothe* drive for Hungarian Relief, jointly sponsored by the Pan Hellenic Council and campus sodalities, closet Monday. Students are requested to bring their clothes contributions to the sodality room in Stalling! Hall any time Monday. GET JR.-SR. PROM TICKETS ATTEND BASEBALL GAME SATURDAY
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 34 No. 23 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1957-04-26 |
| Type | Text |
| Source | Loyola University New Orleans Special Collections & Archives (http://library.loyno.edu/research/speccoll/) New Orleans, LA |
| Format | TIFF |
| Subject | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Rights | Digital rights are held by Loyola University New Orleans. Copyright is retained in accordance with U.S. copyright law. |
| Creator | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Relation-Is Part Of | http://www.louisianadigitallibrary.org/cdm/search/collection/LOYOLA_UMN |
| Language | en |
| Digitized By | BSLW |
| Digitized Date | 2012-2013 |
| Contact Information | For information or permission to use/publish, contact: mailto:archives@loyno.edu |
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